Manataka American Indian Council

From Crystal Harvey, MAIC Correspondent
Fluoride Action Network media release
The evidence that fluoride is harmful is overwhelming
Hardy Limeback Dr. Limeback was one of the 12
scientists who served on the National Academy of Sciences panel
that issued the 2006 report, "Fluoride in Drinking Water: A
Scientific Review of the EPA's Standards." Dr. Limeback is an
associate professor of dentistry and head of the preventive
dentistry program at the University of Toronto.
The argument against fluoridation is strong when all the points
listed below are taken together.
1. Fluoridation is no longer effective.
Fluoride in water has the effect of delaying
tooth eruption and, therefore, simply delays dental decay (Komarek
et al, 2005, Biostatistics 6:145-55). The studies that water
fluoridation work are over 25 years old and were carried out
before the widespread use of fluoridated toothpaste. There are
numerous modern studies to show that there no longer is a
difference in dental decay rates between fluoridated and
non-fluoridated areas, the most recent one in Australia (Armfield
& Spencer, 2004 Community Dental Oral Epidemiology. 32:283-96).
Recent water fluoridation cessation studies show that dental
fluorosis (a mottling of the enamel caused by fluoride) declines
but there is no corresponding increase in dental decay (e.g.
Maupome et al 2001, Community Dental Oral Epidemiology 29:
37-47).
Public health services will claim there is a
dental decay crisis. With the national average in the U.S. of
only two decayed teeth per child (World Health Organization
data), down from more than 15 decayed teeth in the 1940s and
1950s before fluoridated toothpaste, as much as half of all
children grow up not having a single filling. This remarkable
success has been achieved in other developed countries without
fluoridation. The "crisis" of dental decay in the U.S. often
mentioned is the result, to a major extent, of sugar abuse,
especially soda pop. A 2005 report by Jacobsen of the Center for
Science in the Public Interest said that U.S. children consume
40 to 44 percent of their daily refined sugar in the form of
soft drinks. Since most soft drinks are themselves fluoridated,
the small amount of fluoride is obviously not helping.
The families of these children with rampant
dental decay need professional assistance. Are they getting it?
Children who grow up in low-income families make poor dietary
choices, and cannot afford dental care. Untreated dental decay
and lack of professional intervention result in more dental
decay. The York review was unable to show that fluoridation
benefited poor people.
Similarly, early dental decay in nursing infants
(baby bottle syndrome) cannot be prevented with water
fluoridation. The majority of dentists in the U.S. do not accept
Medicaid patients because they lose money treating these
patients. Dentists support fluoridation programs because it
absolves them of their responsibility to provide assistance to
those who cannot afford dental treatment. Even cities where
water fluoridation has been in effect for years are reporting
similar dental "crises."
Public health officials responsible for community
programs are misleading the public by stating that ingesting
fluoride "makes the teeth stronger." Fluoride is not an
essential nutrient. It does not make developing teeth better
prepared to resist dental decay before they erupt into the oral
environment. The small benefit that fluoridated water might
still have on teeth (in the absence of fluoridated toothpaste
use) is the result of "topical" exposure while the teeth are
rebuilding from acid challenges brought on by daily sugar and
starch exposure (Limeback 1999, Community Dental Oral
Epidemiology 27: 62-71), and this has now been recognized by the
Centers for Disease Control.
2. Fluoridation is the main cause of dental
fluorosis.
Fluoride doses by the end user can't be
controlled when only one concentration of fluoride (1 parts per
million) is available in the drinking water. Babies and toddlers
get too much fluoride when tap water is used to make formula (Brothwell
& Limeback, 2003 Journal of Human Lactation 19: 386-90). Since
the majority of daily fluoride comes from the drinking water in
fluoridated areas, the risk for dental fluorosis greatly
increases (National Academy of Sciences: Toxicological Risk of
Fluoride in Drinking Water, 2006).
We have tripled our exposure to fluoride since
fluoridation was conceived in the 1940s. This has lead to every
third child with dental fluorosis (CDC, 2005). Fluorosis is not
just a cosmetic effect. The more severe forms are associated
with an increase in dental decay (NAS: Toxicological Risk of
Fluoride in Drinking Water, 2006) and the psychological impact
on children is a negative one. Most children with moderate and
severe dental fluorosis seek extensive restorative work costing
thousands of dollars. Dental fluorosis can be reduced by turning
off the fluoridation taps without affecting dental decay rates
(Burt et al 2000 Journal of Dental Research 79(2):761-9).
3. Chemicals that are used in fluoridation
have not been tested for safety.
All the animal cancer studies were done on
pharmaceutical-grade sodium fluoride. There is more than enough
evidence to show that even this fluoride has the potential to
promote cancer. Some communities use sodium fluoride in their
drinking water, but even that chemical is not the same fluoride
added to toothpaste. Most cities instead use hydrofluorosilicic
acid (or its salt). H2SiF6 is concentrated directly from the
smokestack scrubbers during the production of phosphate
fertilizer, shipped to water treatment plants and trickled
directly into the drinking water. It is industrial grade
fluoride contaminated with trace amounts of heavy metals such as
lead, arsenic and radium, which are harmful to humans at the
levels that are being added to fluoridate the drinking water. In
addition, using hydrofluorosilicic acid instead of industrial
grade sodium fluoride has an added risk of increasing lead
accumulation in children (Masters et al 2000, Neurotoxicology.
21(6): 1091- 1099), probably from the lead found in the pipes of
old houses. This could not be ruled out by the CDC in their
recent study (Macek et al 2006, Environmental Health
Perspectives 114:130-134).
4. There are serious health risks from water
fluoridation.
Cancer: Osteosarcoma (bone cancer) has recently
been identified as a risk in young boys in a recently published
Harvard study (Bassin, Cancer Causes and Control, 2006). The
author of this study, Dr. Elise Bassin, acknowledges that
perhaps it is the use of these untested and contaminated
fluorosilicates mentioned above that caused the seven-fold
increase risk of bone cancer.
Bone fracture: Drinking on average 1 liter/day of
naturally fluoridated water at 4 parts per million increases
your risk for bone pain and bone fractures (National Academy of
Sciences: Toxicological Risk of Fluoride in Drinking Water,
2006). Since fluoride accumulates in bone, the same risk occurs
in people who drink 4 liters/day of artificially fluoridated
water at 1 part per million, or in people with renal disease.
Fluoridation studies have never properly shown that fluoride is
safe in individuals who cannot control their dose, or in
patients who retain too much fluoride.
Adverse thyroid function: The recent National
Academy of Sciences report (NAS: Toxicological Risk of Fluoride
in Drinking Water, 2006) outlines in great detail the
detrimental effect that fluoride has on the endocrine system,
especially the thyroid. Fluoridation should be halted on the
basis that endocrine function in the U.S. has never been studied
in relation to total fluoride intake.
Adverse neurological effects: In addition to the
added accumulation of lead (a known neurotoxin) in children
living in fluoridated cities, fluoride itself is a known
neurotoxin. We are only now starting to understand how fluoride
affects the brain. While some recent Chinese studies suggest
that fluoride in drinking water lowers IQ (NAS, 2006), we need
to study this more in depth in North America.
In my opinion, the evidence that fluoridation is
more harmful than beneficial is now overwhelming and policy
makers who avoid thoroughly reviewing recent data before
introducing new fluoridation schemes do so at risk of future
litigation.
Date of Publication: May 14, 2006
on Page B02
http://www.southcoasttoday.com/daily/05-06/05-14-06/02opinion.htm